If you are able to be identified from all the the other information supplied in the documents, yes, you can be. An error such as this is known as a "scrivener's error" and is actually not uncommon.
identified by the client
One of your drives has an error (known or unknown)
It is indicated by a red wavy underline
A. Error trapsor error handler.
One of your drives has an error (known or unknown)
Simply rename the subject. The Tibetan butterfly, known as the yellow glory, was officially identified in 1824. The Yellow Glory, more properly known as the Tibetan butterfly was identified in 1824. The Tibetan butterfly, the Yellow Glory, was identified in 1824.
It wasn't his wife that identified him, it was his mistress. She identified him by marks known only to her.
A bug.
No, as long as all the rest of the information on the ticket pertaining to you is correct and you can be identified from it. The fact that the officer failed to write all the digits correctly is of little to no consequence. In law this is known as a "scriveners error."
A system error is an error that originates from the operating system or other low-level operation. Every system error is identified by a single integer value which is specific to the platform. In Windows, for instance, you will find a list of all error codes in the <winerror.h> header file.
a mutation